Stephen King himself has expressed his satisfaction with the adaptation of "1922," stating that he was "delighted by the film." His endorsement further adds to the appeal of the movie for fans of his work.
Wilfred appears reading books twice. First "Silas Marner: The Weaver of Raveloe" novel by George Eliot, published in 1861. And secondly "The House Of The Seven Gables" written by Nathaniel Hawthorne in the 1850s.
There is a Hemingford, Nebraska (in the northwest corner of the state) which some residents claim it to be the town mentioned in The Stand and 1922. Based on the description from the novella, Hemingford Home is likely somewhere on an arc between Norfolk and Weeping Water, in the southeast of the state.
Based on the Stephen King novella "1922", originally published in his 2010 collection "Full Dark, No Stars".
Henry talks of running away and going to Colorado. In The Stand, survivors are drawn to Mother Abigail in Hemingford Home, where Henry also lives, and then travel to Boulder, Colorado, to start over.